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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1931 Whe Bismarck Tribune : An Independent Newspaper rt THE STATE'S OLDEST - NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bsmarck as. ‘second class mail matter. GEORGE D, MANN President and Publisher. 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All rights of republication of all othe: matter herein are also reserved. y, State and County wspaper) (Official Cit fowl and impair the game crop for} years to come and perhaps forever. | The reason for the shortage in} ducks, geese and other game fowl is} the drouth in Canada and in these] northwestern states which constitute} Ithe breeding grounds of the con-| jtinent. Lack of water in the lakes land marshes has prevented the} hatch and the flight southward this} jyear bids fair to be little larger than| |the northward flight last spring.| When the hunters of the south, |shooting until well after Christmas,| jhave completed their “sport” the! jnumber to come north |spring will be pitifully small As pointed out ling here, it is tional action be t: |tion movement is to be |It means little for the Ne jhunter to keep his gun in its case! |this fall if the nix |do not do likewi: Is of the South And yet, the chief objection to shortening or ng the season comes from these southern stat For some reason or ot it’ seems| hard to make them ze that! shooting on the old scaie this year may mean no shoot a next ear and in the In a great many sportsman should be printed with a] s to cases the word] Philosophy Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS | (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON What Would You Do? ‘The Minneapolis Journal comments in an editorial, reprinted in this issuc! of The Tribune, that Al Capone may) go free because of “buck fever” in| the jury room no matter how damn-| ing the evidence against him may he when he comes to trial next month. It takes the view that sure and certain punishment may have been preferable to a trial “peculiar- 'y fraught with haz ; It is a pitiable theory of the ad- ministration of justice in this coun- try, where one man is presumed to be as good as another, but there 1s something to it. Expediency and the; instinct of self-preservation rule in! jury rooms as elsewhere. | ‘The greatest danger, perhaps, is a divided jury when the case finally has been presented. There {s little} chance that the evidence will be so flimsy that a fair-minded and un-/ biased juror would vote not guilty And yet that may happen. ‘There is no more powerful cause for bias than fear. Fear for one’s self cr one’s family. The power of the gangs is not yet wholly broken in Chicago and in a| city where hundreds of murders have! gone undetected and unpunished in| the last few years, a threat to one of the jurors that his life would forfeit if Capone were convicted might eas-|Prompt but inadequate p | ily have more weight than all the fT @ trial jury gamble—for the| testimony offered in the courtroom,|Chance of imposing adequate but de-! layed punishment, or of secin phone might easily sway the judg-|World’s worst hoodlum go fr ment of even a strong man. together. A threatening voice over the tele- The record of the criminal gangs indicates that they would stop at nothing. The threats might be di-| department of justice believed ut rected—and carried out—at the wife|Prompt and certain, though obvicus- or child of a juror as easily as at/ly inadequate, punishment was to be himself. If they are made they will| Preferred to {with 1 be directed in a manner calculated It is easy enough to condemn ajunder no oblizatio’ man who would succumb to such a danger as weak and unworthy to be an American citizen. Nevertheless,| tne for itself and ajr the record spea prudent man, examining it, might): easily be excused if he abandoned are the path of civic righteousnes- for Noeae in past trials, to liberate that of safety, no matter how repug-| pone nant. fe The government will need fearless) Teason that they feared the boot men on that Capone jury and at(lum’s vengeance. Any jury called to a recive chant oti try Capone himself would he exposed to the should make every possible effort to/ protect them. A Little Bit Late into a frenzy of indignation over the Tecent gang outrage in which onejlock, in the face of damning evider child was killed and four others) was undoubtedly what moved th wounded when an attempt to put a) Prosect racketeer “on the spot” went awry. Mayor Walker has announced “when! of righteous anger. that “the gun play was an outgrowth| of beer peddling rivalry”; and that course favored by the district attor- tells you about all you need to know|ney would have been wiser than the about it. course insisted upon by Judge Wilker- json, Capone may get more severe |punishment than was to have been {his lot under the agreement. Or beer gangs for years, Leading gang-|Capone may never sce the inside of a sters have had tremendous political|federal penitentiary, due to inade- influence. Murder after murder has|@uacy of evidence or to buck fever in jury rooms New York, like every other big city in the United States, has tolerated gone unpunished. There is no rea- son to be surprised when an unusual-|the hoodlum’s head the five thousand prohibition counts, to which the plea place. of guilty still technically stands, And there is the likelihood that these liquor charges will be strengthened by a new grand jury, No matter what trial juries do, it will probably be within the government's power to keep Capone traveling to and ~ -m court rooms for a long time to cot ly atrocious and stupid crime takes As Mayor Walker says, it is time to call a halt; but it may prove a) little bit too late. The gangs are ‘well entrenched. The Movement Spreads ‘The movement to shorten the hunt- fing season this year because of the scarcity of wild fowl appears to be gaining strength in the nation. ‘The great sportsmen’s organiza- tions are taking it up and are mak- ing the cause their own, Members of these organizations would rather deprive themselves this year of shooting of doubtful quality rather [ee Serabtinty “the -eristing. water Ting reece armen ee ee Wi to do Capone the most good. ly |liberty, and they have shown that! there are no limits of cruelty or de-| 5 ‘ thrown|P’avity beyond which they are un- New York City has been thrown/Dinny Deyo ;@ plea of guilty, a common and| |defensible practice with prosecutors, they start shooting down babies it is; hoth federal and state, in cases where time to call a halt,” and the Police there are pial nese peararbe to| velter|those in the Capone cases. As our pe etrying about ins fine welter eee ee genera Digach, pun it, “when a creditor agrees to accent All of this is very well; but there sixty cents on the dollar of what is isn’t, really, much sense in getting,due him, it is not because he wishes so hot about it. A press dispatch on|to give up the other forty cents, but} because he wants to make sure of} the day after the shooting remarked getting something.” frequently in the sheep trade on the South St. Paul market and applies to lambs originating in the Dakotas. These lambs are generally a cross between natives and strictly westerns or rangers. chen tours” conducted in six counties Press d ches tell of a Kan: farmer who, angered and disgusted | be of the price offered by the r for his load of whceat,! vate of his wagon and| the opene dro} ate of n Otherwise, it w il advised. Tt did not a price of wheat. It did not contribute| anything toward the financial relict of the farmer. It wasted that had a value In various ing cl open the tail and was, y on a mul astic and extra ide of futile, Ant proje action might relieve the emotio: congress, but it wot t put a sing man t on the job, contrily thing to the restoration of prosperity or add anything of real value to the relief of the nation vheat to/ ————_— juestion ic comments | abroa chit Box! 1CN ALMOST S\N FeeL THE coon es concerning the handi- jthat the Grand Streeters continue to jturn out a quota of successful men. esd harder now, the answer comes | | ‘They point out, furthermore, that Ad | the organization began as a fortress LF |) | jbut the history of New York's East | Side is filled with tales of mobs and with Gilbert Swan fiteiretaes |when judges and financiers, states- ae F ieians and mer- New York, Aug, 4—Whenever ai™en and actors, mus = enever chants, were youngsters the Grand ing to vaudeville. against rackets may flourish in new forms. ‘get-together. Street boys came into existence for and spill the taxpayers';caps and opportunities of a/ great) the purpose of saving lads from the city, New York points proudly to the streets, et_Boys.” |healthy-minded citizens. Father Manhattan, is) Al Smith was a Grand Street boy. anding proof that lads of the So was Ben Bernie, and tenements can rise to/ leader, sition in life. And when some | street and showed signs of consider- that the world is! able musical talent as a lad, but shift- ng and that gangsterism is'ed to the study of engineering at in the land and that things Columbia. Finding himself weak in Speaking of Ben Bernie reminds me| progress for humanity. t the accordion vogue promises} In his message to King Albert of| to reach a peak in Manhattan some-|Belgium King George expressed con- |time about autumn. Little shops have) fidence in the ultimate restoration |been cropping up all over town, dis-jof Belgium to her rightful position ;Playing piano accordions. And there/among the free countries of Europe, ;sre a couple of dozen schools for|adding: Most cafe bands and radio| “The unfailing spirit of her people bands now have an accordion soloist|/under the grievous suffering inflict-| the orchestra who was born flings can be heard in any neighbor- hood. Almost all the young gents: who failed to learn the saxophone are trying again. Nor is the rage entirely local. From Diero, the accordion “wiz” who has turned teacher, I learn that gents come from as far away as Washing- ton, D. C., to take lessons, eee There is some indication that the appeals of musicians for the return of “flesh” music, as against the can- ned variety, is getting results. Pawnshops report that dozens of musical instruments have recently things were that bad! And still are with hundreds of them. The pawnbrokers also report that musicians hock practically every other form of valuable before falling back on their beloved fiddles, x ee Manhattan's most interesting thea- trical experiment is under way. The depression has hit the actors quite as hard as the musicians. And Heywood Broun, the ‘columnist, got the bright idea of putting on a revue which would be casted by out-of- work players and chorines. Tho} sketches, costumes, songs and all the rest have been contributed by promi- nent theater figures. Only the per- formers are paid, and they will share cooperatively the box office rewards. If it works, the idea may grow and something new happen to Broadway. GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) ! { KING GEORGE'S MESSAGE tained.” The king also expressed confidence} ipeoples and the heroism of their! forces in achieving a final victory,! obtaining the possibility of peaceful This is no time for the American) Syrammmam people to listen to or practice tailgate philosophy. | Editorial Comment | | Editorials print ow the d of t The Capone Case (Minneapolis J In the Capone ca ment now trad ment) red into the penalty defense counse! the jarly fraught rds. Bi ge James H erson evidently believed ot wise, when he wi tipulation, and th thdrawal of Car ilty in the income tax c attempted withdrawal of a of guilty in the prohibition con spi ‘Tria s in the Capone cases Panicky jurors have nts on ch: 2s grave as murder, plainly for the of them, are This risk of acquittal or jury dead ion to agree to a relatively short prison sentence in exchange for] Time alone will tell whether the Meanwhile, there still hang over “Dakotas” is a term heard quite A series of 18 Homemakers’ “kit- by the extension service as a part of @ kitchen improvement project was attended by a total of 1,186 persons. RRR ese ae Rapa ——— : : ssceitasacnat acl AS the newly married pair drove RU UA ie tiful, tries, ROBARD, when his to forget Vi! polo playe ‘8 fashionable Long Island AUGH, wealthy n Cass goes on tour = 1 Liane accepts, she refuses, and her sister, je to visit enn, Who wants to marry CI es with a gang of blackmiailers police Heutenant, SRMID, interferes, je hunt ball Liane som, She is rescued by McDermid and Cilve, The wedding ts to take place Christmas day. Ju gces to church Ti a note from Rob: and the wedding takes place. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXXIV through the village the Christ- mas carolers wandered through the snow. Oh night divine, oh night when Christ was born.” Along the road lights glim- mered frostily, the blue and little trees in friendly houses. The world was very beautiful. A plane zoomed above the travellers, its motor throbbing in the night sym- phony. you liked. You said you'd never; been to Florida I thigit, 8008] empty, She called, “Clive. Oh, Clive “Anything,” Edane agreed. She|The very sound of her ewn voice of an overpowering | térrified her. thet suit you?” lassituée, T prints. Liane scarcely noticed all Her things were laid out on coverlet when she came in from the negligee of sleeves dripping more of the same, the mules ted with gold. “Anything more, madame?” esked the demure girl in unt- form. Liane said no, flushing under tho maid’s interested scrutiny. ‘For two pins,” Clive sald genially when the door had closed behind her, “‘she’d phone the re- porters our headquarters. Only I got there first. I bribed her my- colt,” Liane stood before the oval mirror rearranging her rumpled hair. “We can dine up here,” Clive said from the doorway. “Unless you'd rather go downstairs.” She turned, catching his in- Y SERVICE Int Ss mse) / 92 HERE TODAY tent gaze upon her. ETT, 18 and beau- |she murmured. A | much pleasanter. wement ts an- | we. should dine at all I don't LADD, povu- | know. Certainly I'm not hungi “I am,” Clive announced. m engagement tm | eaten nothing all day and I’m the big bed, the fine linen, the mauve coverlet. She threw these aside and swung herself over the edge, cramming her toes into those gilt crusted mules. A knock sounded at the door. said “come” she dove frantically into the folds of that exquisitely fashioned negligee. “Come!” she called again, ap- palled at the prospect of a strange man in her room. A housematd, not the one of the night before, appeared. said you might be wanting me.” “Oh, yes, I do. Will you have this pressed for me, please?” “Mr, Cleespaugh said to tell you breakfast will be up directly. He has gone out but will be back in a moment,” parroted the ser- Although why lony that the Barretts | Tavenous.” Liane becomes Mrs. | presently a trio of solemn waiters "au woednt wecretary: | arrived bearing Lppersopy tables arrayed with silver covered Clive ean not inherit his | dishes, Liane had thought she oe forfung unless he marries | would not. be able to touch food, | . but her healthy young appetite asserted itself and she ate with| zest. were borne away, ve, begins to | check its appalling make trouble for Liane. She con- signed. “A family might week on that amount,” na énaped to be held for ran- | marvelled. Clive laughed at her naivete. “Ah, but they could! You don't fore Liane | know what it is to be poor.” She exsing her |Tegarded him with a gravity he to elope with him. Liane refuses | found utterly charming. “You'll never have that particu- lar sort of bad time again,” he She smiled at him. “I don't know why you're so good to me,” she began, and broke off, It was difficult, keeping their discussion on the “Noel, Noel, oh night divine, impersonal basis they had planned. Clive said abruptly, tired. Better turn in, hadn't we?” The “we” startled her. suppose we should. . In the pale green room, the door shut against him, she She caught the filmy night things to her and fied into the bathroom whera in a maze of jade and onyx she bathed and “Do you mind,” Clive asked,| brushed out her tumbling hair. “if we stay at the Bleeckman to-| With the flowing robe of biscuit pe night? I didn't tell anyone where/| stuff clutched around her she we were going, but I thought we| trailed across the boudoir, timid- might start south tomorrow if] iy epened the door. room was quite “Thank you.” The tone dis- her but still the maid lingered, pretending to straighten a curtain. She studied Liane with a covert glance. The dress had not been re- turned when Clive came back and so, with an apology, Liane pre- sented herself at the table in the her. and girl swung along. “Our train do a few things. Would you like to send some flowers to your mother?” reminded her. “I hope you don’t mind,” she|to think of it. She's having Ver- non and some other people for dinner at the apartment. She'll love it.” coloring sgain, He laughed at her “You look exactly as a bride is supposed to look.” His laugh had a touch of bit- terness in it. “Don't mistake me. I went into this with my eyes open. agreed to this as a sort of busi- ness arrangement. cared—or thought you cared— for Van. And that you thought it was hopeless.” He set down, imson and silver of lMghts on| ono ;, rapher, strolling dolefully about, I knew you paused. “Here, let's be- gin, Unless I'm spoiling your ap- Don’t let me do that. We've got to straighten this out. “I expect only a few things of Loyalty, an appearance of It ought to be easy, I'll not interfere.” She interrupted him, her head high, “I’m willing to give all of that. You know that.” “I was going to say I'd not in- terfere with any of your pursuits. Steer clear of Van. He’s bad medicine.” “Do you think it’s necessary to was. Friendly, nothing more. races Gangtin uite into which they were| shoulders looking broader in the presently shown was suave {g|stiff white of his shirt, he ap- pale green damask and French| peared in the other doorway. He said it quietly as this. one might speak to a child. “I—I just wanted to say good i night.” the painted bed with the damask Be cant tues ee cs ihis aa the sitting room. The blond satin vent teteee night robe with the darker lace, He bent and touched her hand. “Our agreement holds,” he said in a curious voice, your part of the bargain, keep mine.” He wheeled and the door closed on him. Liane heard the lock click faintly. In her own room she looked curiously at the hand he had held for an instant. Strange while hers was cool and steady, his had been trembling!. s 80 stiff, so on guard. She must not act like a giddy schoolgirl. tion, Only his hand remained, “I don’t know. I'm telling you, He's stirred lots of hearts, but his own is always calm enough. Maybe you think I'm not sporting to tell you all this. I like Van. He’s a swell guy, it you like him, I always have. I know his ways, But I’m not go- ing to have him make a mess of things in my home.” How stern he looked with his Liane could not down a certain pride in hearing this young man’s name. Faintly she said, “I'll play falr. Don’t worry.” . jaw firmly set! Held out his hand across the breakfast things. “That's right, partner. Now let’s talk about pleasant things. Have you forgotten it’s Christmas morn- HE awoke to a sense of drama and danger. The strange room, the drawn damask curtains, her frock folded across the back of a Louis XIV chair all brought her back to the present. “I was married yesterday,” she reminded herself, She stretched, luxuriating in For the first time in all _my life.” He put a box into her hands. disclosed @ circlet The lid litter 131 by NEAY vi MABEL. of diamonds. “It's too beautiful and you'ra too good to me!” “Nonsense.” The maid whose knock had not been heard entered on this pretty ° tableau. she thought, disap- f I'd come a minute later he'd been kissing her.” She hung the biscuit colored frock in the closet and tiptoed out. “Just like the movies,” she told her young man when she met him later that day. “Him a bit like Robert Montgomery, and the Mrs. sort of like Joan Crawford only prettier. “Some have all the luck,” the maid muttered. She stood at the door of the linen room as the couple went by, the girl pale and slim in her coat of supple dark fur, a spicy scent drifting after L.A NE A HO Outside in the crisp air the boy leaves at three. We have time to She glowed. “How sweet of you He ordered long stemmed roses, freesia, violets. In another shop off the lobby he added a huge box of candy to the array. They walked. A society photog- caught a glimpse of the pair and snapped them, grinning. This was his lucky day! and the uncertain, asthmatic put-! been taken from hock. Oh, yes, | : _| On Aug. 4, 1917, King George V of! mathematics, he called it off ana|£08land, on the occasion of the third turned to peddling fiddles, graduat-/@nniversary of the war, sent identical telegrams to the presidents and/all right—Andrew W. Mellon, There are hundreds of prominent |S°vereigns of the United States, ee men scattered over greater Manhat-|France, Portugal, Italy, Japan, Ser- tan who graduated from the Grand} bia and Rumania expressing “the un- Annually they have a/Wavering determination of the British Some come in limou-|Empire to pursue the contest until) sines and some by subway, and the|Ur joint efforts are crowned with) old-timers use themselves as exam-jSuCcess and our common aims at-/ |Ples for the younger generation, | ond ta a Ble ake te ee ee ede lin the unwavering will of the allied few of them have ever “made bad!” |know what it means and it will be EDITOR'S NOTE—Thig is the fifth of a series of 26 timely arti- cles by Dr. Morris Fishbein on “Food Truths and Follies,” deal- ing with such much discussed but little known subjects as calories, vitamins, minerals, digestion and balanced diet. x % # BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN (Editor, Journal of the American Medical Association) Associated with the development of the machines, has come a gradual change in food habits, so that we eat less meat, less cereals, less sugar and less carbohydrates generally than formerly. The per capita consump- jtion of sugar has dropped from 109 pounds per person per year to 99 pounds. The fall in the consumption of cereals has been so great as to cause extreme consternation in the cereal industry, from the farmer down to the baker. I have been saying, much about calories and have not yet explained exactly what a calory is. Calory is a term used to indicate a measure~ ment of energy in terms of heat. When the human body does work, it takes up oxygen, gives off carbon dioxide, water and heat. Carbohy- drates, proteins and fats taken into the body undergo chemical changes ed upon them by their enemies will continue to inspire the joint efforts of the allied countries against the nation which has trampled them un- derfoot.” % > | Quotations | ae Pe adinchciace bolas ry Just use the phrase (political apeasement) anyway; nobody will Men who are elected to office are not those who have the greatest, knowledge and capacity, but those who have the greatest political skill. —wWill Durant. 7 +e # The statement that a person is lousy in his engagements and en- deavors, meaning that his efforts are not commendable but rather inferior in result, and on the whole subject to unfavorable criticism, is not libel- ous per se or libel at all—dJustice Schmuck of New York. x # A crying need of the world today is a Marquis of Queensberry who will lay down rules governing feminine hostilities Elsie McCormick. f BARBS ‘ ¢———— With the big news of the day con- cerned with armament cuts, slices in salary and dividend slashes, future generations will probably understand. A. D. to mean After Dissection, * ee What this country needs more than @ five-cent cigar is a good two-ree} comedy. eee When the good wife asks for a fifty to buy & gown that, as the literati well know, is also a figure of speech. eee ‘Banks were recently closed in Chile. But where is a more appropriate place to have frozen assets? (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) Henry N. Arnold of New York was named one of the chief heirs In the will of the late Mrs, Mary F. Henderson, wealthy Washington Daily Health Service Our Declining Appetites Workers in Machine Age Need Less Meat, Sugars—Cereal— Industry Hit by Fall in Consumption and make their energy available. ‘This energy is then measured in terms of calories. As a result, it has become possible to say exactly how many calories of energy will be de- veloped by any certain food in any certain amount. The energy needed by the body must be made up of definite quan- tities of protein, fat and carbohy- drates. The body can select to a certain extent from all of the food given to it what it needs for energy, growth and repair of tissue. How- ever, there are certain minimum quantities of essential foods, and un- less these are supplied difficulties of nutrition may develop. Because of these factors of safety in the human body, bad food habits may persist over @ considerable length of time before resulting in the form of definite disease. In general, it seems that the human body needs about 1,800 grams of protein daily, 56 grams of fat, and 500 grams of carbohydrates. There are conditions in which protein, carbohydrates and fates must be modified in amount as Occurs, for instance, in obesity. The proteins are not simple sub- stances, and they vary exactly as do the carbohydrates and the fats. It is because of this new knowledge that the science of nutrition de- veloped. REGISTRATION FOR CEMETERIES NEEDED Burying Grounds Must Be List- ed With State Within 90 Days, Says Whittemore Dr. A. A. Whittemore, state health officer, pointed out Tuesday that, ac- cording tq a law passed by the last legislature, all cemeteries in North Dakota must be registered with the state department of health within 90 days. Before a cemetery can be reg- istered it must conform to certain requirements. They are: 1. Each cemetery must have form- ed a permanent organization, with a secretary and sexton. 2, Each cemetery must be properly Plotted into systematic blocks, lots and graves and the original drawing must be filed with the county reg- ister of deeds. 3. Regular and systematic records of burials must be kept by the sexton, 4. Regular reports must be made to the state department of health. 5. An application must be made to the state department of health for registration, No fees of any kind are necessary. Dr. Whittemore said that no buriais will be allowed to be made in an un- registered cemetery after October 3ist, 1931. Application forms and all further information may be had by writing to the state department of health, Bismarck, N. D. Women who like to trip along in dowager. style are falling for pajamas. Clive looked at his watoh. “Lord, we've got to hurry. Must pack, too.” He commandeered a taxi. The jolting flung her against him. She flushed, “Sorry.” How silly, she thought, an in- stant later. The smile he gave her had a wry quality about it. He put an arm around her to steady her. A casual touch it She relaxed. She must not bo He stared out the window. He seemed not to sense her perturba- warm, somehow reassuring, on her shoulder. Back in the hotel rooms there was no time for chance embar- rassments. She flung her things into her bags. She dared not cram in that last bottle of scent. It might spill, stain her things. She called the maid of the morning. “Would you like to have this?” She held ft out, the silver and black bottle sending out breaths of heady fragrance. “Oh thank you, madame. That's lovely.” “For Christmas. I hope you'll have a happy one.” Something in the girl’s drab face touched her. Something wist- ful, yearning. “And you, madame. I hops you'll have a happy married life if you'll pardon me saying so.” “Thank you.” Cfive heard. He stood in the doorway, faintly smiling. : «To Be Continued) % THis Tree Seung Be tp Li THEM OVER IIS TRUNK, AS A PROTECTIVE COVERING «1. _—_—_— “THIS CURIOUS WORL Steg 4 OROOPING TANS WRITE THEIR PRAYERS ON a BETANS, BLADES OF SHEEP AN HANG THEM OVER A PATHWAY. WHENSET IN MOTION BY PASSERS-GY, THE BONES _ARE BELIEVED TO OFFER UP THE PRAYER. | ie ol kk vandal -? ? pre ae anno po ie Pe ae ee er a ey ener rae ee Neocon ist enemy sti hak Ae Bee ee eee ese